I love words. I love my son. So, of course, I love doing
language arts games with him. He thinks we’re playing. I know he’s learning.
That totally fills my cup.
Last summer at summer camp, my son played a wonderful
game with dominoes that were imprinted with subtraction problems and answers. I
decided it could easily be replicated with parts of speech. I was right.
I made four pages of dominoes imprinted with the names of
four types of speech: adjectives, nouns, pronouns, and verbs and those types of
words.
Make the Dominoes
I printed them on heavyweight cardstock, cut them out,
and glued half of them to two sheets of 6mm craft foam. Using a craft knife and
a ruler as a straight edge, I cut them out when they were dry. Then I glued the
rest of the cut-outs to the back.
Download a 4-page PDF of word dominoes here. |
Now, it was time for the fun!
Time to Play
With the glue dried, I dumped the dominoes in a small plastic
tub. When my son came home, we reviewed what makes a:
1. pronoun (e.g. he, her, us, we, they, etc. and replaces nouns)
2. noun (a person, place, animal, or thing)
3. verb (action word)
4. adjective (describing word).
Then, he took one domino out of the tub. I told him to
look at the domino. On one end (in a colored box) was a type of word (e.g. noun,
adjective, etc.). The other end was a word (e.g. school, jump, she, etc.). His job
was to place another domino perpendicular to that one that matched with either end.
For example, if his domino said verb and dog, he needed
to find a domino that either had a verb on it (like jump) or the word noun,
since the word dog is a noun.
One by one, my son pulled the dominoes out of the tub and
arranged them on the table adjacent to others.
He wanted to close up the shape that was evolving on the
table, so he often moved and replaced dominoes. This was great practice and a
lot of fun, too.
I can’t wait until we play this again!
Wow! This is such an awesome idea! Thank you so much for sharing the download. I really look forward to putting this together for my children. I was just teaching this to my 2 of my children. Have a GREAT weekend! Thanks again, Lisa :-)
ReplyDeleteWow, I love this!!! Thank you for this.
ReplyDeleteAmy
Krazy About Kiddos
Thanks for sharing! My class finished reviewing parts of speech and this game is going to be perfect for center practice!
ReplyDeleteI am really excited about making this for my son and my classroom! Thanks so much for a fantastic idea - and printable!
ReplyDeleteI getting the stuff for this TODAY! Thanks for such great activities.
ReplyDeleteThank you, this is awesome stuff!
ReplyDeleteYou are incredible!!! I too am a believer that learning does not end at school and now I'm glad that I have place to run to for ideas when I'm feeling a block. Thanks
ReplyDeleteAh, thanks! I'm SO glad you've found some useful ideas here. It's wonderful to "meet" another like-minded mom that believes in making learning fun outside of school! Keep following. They'll be plenty more ideas coming in 2013!
DeleteThank you so much for sharing this! I found it on Pinterest.
ReplyDeleteLovely!
ReplyDeleteMake sure you don't teach that verbs are just doing words: they're being words too! With only the simple definition, children tend to have trouble recognising that "be" "were" etc. are verbs as they don't sound very active.
It's also useful, particularly with older children, to teach that nouns (generally) can change for singular and plural, while verbs can change for tense.
very useful. im a teacher ;D
ReplyDeletethank you for this, it is soooo useful for my english class <3
ReplyDeleteWhat a fantastic idea! More than that, how nice of you to share it with everyone! Thank you so much!
ReplyDelete